Even if you don’t agree with Twitter’s new font changes, that’s a tweet well-typed.

LeBron James is not from Miami. He’s technically not really from Cleveland, either, but the chance to thrill fans in Northern Ohio all over again was too strong to pass up. That’s an understandable decision, in lower case letters, one that was delivered without the gut-punch of a televised special in front of a preening Jim Gray, rather one that was delivered in a cogent essay as told to one of the great NBA scribes of all time: Sports Illustrated’s Lee Jenkins.

A James championship in Cleveland is no sure thing, even though the Cavaliers boasted one of the NBA’s most enviable young cores even prior to bringing in LeBron. Kyrie Irving will have to learn to play off the ball, Dion Waiters will have to shore up his shot selection, Anthony Bennett has to prove that he can contribute on an NBA level (much less live up to the promise that a top overall draft pick usually provides), and Andrew Wiggins has anything and everything to learn about the pro game. Wiggins is a full decade younger than LeBron, who chose a “win later” team in Cleveland over a “win now” squad somewhere else.

Arison understands this, and as someone who has had the pleasure of getting to go to five NBA Finals in the last eight years, he’s mindful of what James’ surprisingly-short tenure in Miami has given him.